Fleeting Things: English Poets and Poems, 1616-1660Harvard University Press, 1990 - 394 páginas Offers new interpretations of poems by Milton, Jonson, Herrick, and Lovelace, and looks at five themes in seventeenth century English poetry. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 39
Página 4
... experiences haunt our later lives , fleeting things which , once lost , we long vainly to restore . Her- rick is thinking back to a threshold experience in which a game governed by rules which made triumph and loss inconsequential ...
... experiences haunt our later lives , fleeting things which , once lost , we long vainly to restore . Her- rick is thinking back to a threshold experience in which a game governed by rules which made triumph and loss inconsequential ...
Página 11
... experience , and observation of things . Out of them he fashions his memorial poem , rather like the engraver who restores Shakespeare out of the memories of those who knew him , or the reader of Shakespeare who needs to balance the ...
... experience , and observation of things . Out of them he fashions his memorial poem , rather like the engraver who restores Shakespeare out of the memories of those who knew him , or the reader of Shakespeare who needs to balance the ...
Página 214
... experience , for his waking is a return to our darkness ; but the experience is still closely related to ours , for our sight and his blindness are only two slightly different versions of fallen man's fancied sight as opposed to the ...
... experience , for his waking is a return to our darkness ; but the experience is still closely related to ours , for our sight and his blindness are only two slightly different versions of fallen man's fancied sight as opposed to the ...
Contenido
Thresholds I | 1 |
Praising and Blaming | 15 |
Strafford and Buckingham | 41 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 14 secciones no mostradas
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
action appear ballad become begins Bermudas body called century Charles Charles's church close comes common contrast court dead death describes doth English epigram example experience expression eyes face fair fall fear final follow give given hair hand hath head heart Herbert Herrick hope idea ideal John Jonson keep kind king king's lady least leave light lines live look lost means Milton mind move nature never offer once opening peace perhaps piece play poem poet poetry political possible praise present proverb Puritan reader rest restoration rose seas seems sense Shakespeare ship soul stand stanza sweet thee things thou thought tion true turns unto verse whole wind write written